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Medical News
Treating AIDS Infection Immediately Might Stall Immune DecayFebruary 17, 2009 Study results presented Feb. 9 at the 16th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections in Montreal found significant benefits may be associated with treating patients immediately following HIV infection. A second study presented at the conference showed that HIV patients live longer when treated even before CD4 levels drop below 500 copies per milliliter, rather than waiting until they reach lower levels. Mari Kitahata of the University of Washington-Seattle and colleagues found the risk of death from any cause was 60 percent higher in patients who waited to get ARV treatment. A third study, led by Jonathan Sterne of the research group When to Start Consortium, looked at patients treated along a spectrum of CD4 levels. It found that HIV patients lived longer or took more time to progress to AIDS when they were treated earlier. The challenge, said Leone, is finding newly infected patients. Most HIV infections are diagnosed by the presence of antibodies responding to the virus, proteins that do not appear until a few weeks after infection takes place. North Carolina is the only US state that routinely uses a testing method that looks for HIV's genetic material, which takes only a few days, he said. The studies show that "with our crude tools we may be able to slow the progress of the disease. It suggests that there's an opportunity to do more, if we have more research on what's going on in this early period of infection," said Leone. Bloomberg News 02.09.2009; John Lauerman This article was provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a part of the publication CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update.
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